The Girl Who Married A Whale, 1991
Rick Bartow
American Wiyot (born 1946, died 2016)
Location: Washington State Patrol - District VII Headquarters, Marysville, Marysville
About the Artwork
'The Girl Who Married a Whale' by Rick Bartow (Wiyot) represents the communion between animal and human, using abstracted and gestural brush strokes. Bartow is widely celebrated for his stirring and expressive artworks that combine Native American and contemporary artistic traditions.
This artwork was acquired for the State Art Collection in partnership with Washington State Patrol.
About the Artist
Celebrated Native American artist Rick Bartow (Wiyot, 1946-2016) is known for his expressive artworks about transformation, spiritual figures, and self-portraits. He often contrasted the physical and spiritual existence, showing figures in transformation between the human and animal worlds. He is an important leader in contemporary Native American art.Bartow was born and lived most of his life on the Oregon coast in Newport. He graduated from Western Oregon State College with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Secondary Art Education in 1969. He was drafted into the U.S. Army and served in the Vietnam War from 1969–1971 as a teletype operator, returning home with post-traumatic stress disorder. Bartow was also a life-long musician and songwriter, and an enrolled member of the Mad River Band of Wiyot Indians (Northern California). His art can be found in over a hundred collections and museums. A pair of monumental sculptures by Bartow stand outside of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian in Washington D.C.


